Los Angeles Times

Utility pays bills for Kendrick

Willingnes­s to play multiple positions brought veteran back to Dodgers.

- By Bill Shaikin bill. shaikin@ latimes. com

Dodgers might not have re- signed veteran if he hadn’t been willing to play some third base.

Howie Kendrick has played 9,402 innings at second base, six at third base. He was the Dodgers’ starting second baseman last year. Yet, had he insisted on the same role this year, the Dodgers might not have brought him back.

In the last two weeks, with no club willing to surrender the draft pick necessary to sign him away, Kendrick and the Dodgers resumed negotiatio­ns. The Dodgers brought up third base, a position Kendrick has not played since 2006.

“He expressed a willing- ness to play different spots,” Andrew Friedman, president of baseball operations, said Thursday on a conference call after the team officially announced Kendrick’s new two- year, $ 20- million contract. “That’s when things kind of accelerate­d.”

Half the money in the deal is deferred, but Friedman said the deferments in the contracts of Kendrick and fellow free- agent signee Scott Kazmir did not ref lect f inancial limitation­s imposed by Dodgers ownership.

“Any time you can spread out money, it’s helpful,” Friedman said.

Justin Turner, the Dodgers’ starting third baseman, is coming off knee surgery and never has played more than 126 games in a season. Friedman said there could be 1,300 or 1,400 at- bats for Kendrick and Chase Utley — each of whom is expected to play some third base — and Enrique Hernandez, who can play second base, shortstop and center field.

“There’s a lot of playing time to go around,” Friedman said.

Friedman declined to say whether he was in trade discussion­s with the Chicago White Sox. However, there is little traction in talks between the teams, according to a person familiar with the matter but not authorized to discuss it publicly.

The White Sox approached the Dodgers about Yasiel Puig — apparently in the hope that fellow Cuban Jose Abreu might bring out the best in the outfielder — and the Dodgers instead tried to interest the White Sox in outfielder­s Andre Ethier and Carl Crawford.

 ?? Wally Skalij ?? HOWIE KENDRICK batted .295 with nine home runs, a .336 on- base average and .409 slugging percentage in his f irst year with the Dodgers last season.
Los Angeles Times
Wally Skalij HOWIE KENDRICK batted .295 with nine home runs, a .336 on- base average and .409 slugging percentage in his f irst year with the Dodgers last season. Los Angeles Times

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